June 14, 2026
The End of Borderless AI: It’s the Day AI Needed a Passport
What the Recent 2 Claude Model Shutdowns Reveal About the Future of Artificial Intelligence
Dr Michael Broadly, DHSc
5 min read
Context of this story: Anthropic's new Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models were taken offline as the U.S. government issued an emergency export control directive banning all foreign nationals from accessing them. The directive, issued on 12 June 2026 by the U.S. Commerce Department's Bureau of Industry and Security, cited urgent national security concerns regarding the advanced capabilities of these frontier artificial intelligence models.
I reckon the U.S. Government shutting down 2 Claude Models (Fable 5 and Mythos 5) is more than a matter for Anthropic business. I explain why.
We Might Be Witnessing the Birth of AI Borders
G'day Folks and Happy Sunday!
When I first read reports that Anthropic had withdrawn access to two of its latest AI models (Fable 5 and Mythos 5), following a U.S. export-control directive, my immediate reaction was probably the same as many technology enthusiasts'.
I wondered exactly what had happened, whether there was a security flaw, and how the company would respond. Like most readers, I initially saw it as a corporate story involving one of the world's leading artificial intelligence companies.
However, after reflecting on the news for a while, covered by several mainstream agencies, I began to suspect that we might be looking at the wrong story. The headlines focus on Anthropic, government orders, export restrictions, and access to specific AI models.
These details are certainly important, but they may not be the most significant aspect of what is unfolding before our eyes. Sometimes a news event serves as a window into a much larger transformation, and I believe this may be one of those moments.
The more I thought about it, the more I realized that this story is not really about Anthropic at all. It is about how governments are beginning to view advanced artificial intelligence and what that change in perception might mean for the future of technology.
From Software to Strategic Infrastructure
For most of my career until retirement, software was treated primarily as a commercial product. Organizations purchased software to improve productivity, automate processes, manage information, and create new business opportunities.
While some technologies attracted regulatory attention, software itself generally flowed freely across borders. A program developed in one country could be used almost anywhere in the world with relatively few restrictions.
Artificial intelligence is beginning to challenge that long-standing assumption. The latest generation of AI systems can do far more than generate text, create images, or answer questions.
They can accelerate scientific research, support software development, analyze large datasets, identify security vulnerabilities, and support complex decision-making processes.
These capabilities make AI valuable not only to businesses but also to governments, research institutions, defense organizations, and national economies.
Once a technology reaches that level of importance, it inevitably attracts strategic attention. History provides many examples. Nuclear technologies, advanced semiconductors, telecommunications infrastructure, and cryptographic systems all eventually became matters of national interest.
Governments recognized that these technologies could influence economic competitiveness, security, and geopolitical power. Artificial intelligence now appears to be entering the same category.
I think my recent story about the real AI race can give you useful perspectives. If you have missed it, here is the link to it:
The Hallucinating Chatbots Distracted Us While the Real AI Revolution Happened Elsewhere While We Were Arguing About Artificial Intelligence Writing Poems and Hallucinated Stories to Earn Cents, Governments…
The Question Nobody Was Asking
For the past few years, public discussions about AI have largely revolved around capability. People want to know which model performs better, which company is ahead, and which chatbot produces the most impressive responses.
These are interesting questions that generate considerable media attention, but they may no longer be the most important ones. The Anthropic incident highlights a different issue altogether.
Instead of asking which AI system is smartest, we may need to start asking who controls access to advanced intelligence. That question shifts the conversation from technology to governance, from innovation to sovereignty, and from engineering to geopolitics.
Many people still think of AI as just another software application. Governments now appear to see something different. They see a technology that could influence scientific leadership, cybersecurity capabilities, economic productivity, military planning, and national resilience.
Whether one agrees with that perspective or not, it helps explain why policymakers are becoming more interested in controlling access to advanced AI systems.
A Wake-Up Call for Australia
As an Australian, I found another aspect of this story particularly interesting. Like many nations, Australia relies heavily on technologies developed overseas. Our businesses use foreign cloud platforms.
Our researchers depend on international software ecosystems. Increasingly, our organizations are incorporating AI tools developed by companies located in other countries.
Most of the time, this arrangement works extremely well. We benefit from world-class innovation without needing to build every technology ourselves.
However, events like this remind us that reliance on external technology providers can create strategic vulnerabilities. Decisions made in Washington, Silicon Valley, Beijing, or Brussels can have direct consequences for users in Melbourne, Sydney, Perth, or Adelaide.
This observation is not intended as criticism of any particular country or company. It is simply a reminder that, like physical infrastructure, digital infrastructure creates relationships of dependence. The more critical a technology becomes, the more important those relationships become as well.
The Real Shift Happening Beneath the Surface
Ironically, the most significant AI revolution may have very little to do with chatbots. While the public remains fascinated by conversational interfaces and benchmark scores, a deeper transformation is taking place beneath the surface.
Artificial intelligence is gradually becoming part of the strategic fabric of modern societies. Governments are investing heavily in domestic AI capabilities. Nations are competing for talent, computing resources, and semiconductor supply chains.
Regulatory frameworks are emerging worldwide. Discussions that once belonged primarily to computer scientists now involve policymakers, military planners, economists, and diplomats.
The Anthropic story may ultimately be remembered as one small chapter within that broader transformation. It offers a glimpse of a future in which access to advanced AI systems may be influenced not only by technological capabilities but also by political considerations, national interests, and international agreements.
My Final Reflections
Having worked in the field of science empowered by technology for 5 decades, I have learned that the most profound changes arrive disguised as technical events. The rise of the internet was never really about websites. Cloud computing was never really about servers. Smartphones were never really about making phone calls.
Similarly, I suspect the AI revolution is not really about chatbots. The Anthropic episode may be revealing something far more consequential.
We may be witnessing the early stages of a world where artificial intelligence is increasingly treated as a strategic asset rather than merely a software product. If that trend continues, future generations may look back on events like this and recognize them as the first signs that AI had crossed an important threshold.
For decades, software helped dissolve borders. The emerging AI era may be teaching us a very different lesson. The more valuable artificial intelligence becomes, the more governments may seek to define its boundaries. And that possibility is far more interesting than the fate of any single AI company.
I also documented another technological development in the business world, offering new perspectives on the constructive use of artificial intelligence. Here is the link to this business story:
The $5 Million PowerPoint Is Dying How AI Is Tearing Apart the Consulting Industry's Most Profitable Illusion
Thanks for reading my story from Down Under. Have a lovely day.
I started a new series called the World Is Fucked Up. Here are two stories that might entertain and educate you:
In a World F@cked Up, Here's What Medical Gaslighting Taught Me About Public Health
If you are interested in sex, I have started a sex education series which might educate, inspire, or even entertain you. Here are the links to some sample stories:
The 8 Habits of Sexually Satisfied Couples With Any Sexual Orientation
What Most People Were Never Taught About Female and Male Orgasm
The Neurobiology of Sexual Pleasure and Meaningful Human Connection.
Human Libido: What Most People Were Never Taught About Sexual Desire
Neurocognitive and Affective Differences Between Erotic and Pornographic Stimuli in the Brain [Warning: This one is scholarly!]
What Science Reveals About Anal Pleasure and Orgasm for Both Women and Men [Free access via my community blogs]
Originally published on my blog site.
Cheers, Mike!